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Simorgh: A Sufi-Hermeneutic Horizon to Essential Existential Understanding of L2 MetaphorsSalehi Kahrizsangi, Farzaneh 19 August 2021 (has links)
No description available.
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Ampliative understandingWhalen, Alexander Crutchfield January 2018 (has links)
Virtue-theoretic accounts of knowledge start by capturing the value of knowledge as an achievement and work from there to develop a full theory of knowledge. But environmental luck, which is compatible with achievements but typically defeats knowledge, introduces some unique challenges for these accounts to overcome. While far from devastating for the virtue-theoretic project, several authors have viewed these worries as an opportunity to shift their focus towards understanding. In the past, understanding has been mostly ignored by epistemologists who considered it to be a psychological state rather than something worth further inquiry. Over the past decade, this view has changed and understanding is quickly becoming a topic of great interest and lively debate. Among the key questions in this debate is the relationship between knowledge and understanding, the role of epistemic luck, and whether understanding has final value as a cognitive achievement. However, the debate is taking place in the absence of a useful theory of understanding that can provide a principled means of addressing these topics. This project aims to help remedy the situation by identifying a kind of understanding, which I call ampliative understanding, that can provide a framework in which the current debate can take place. In staying true to the virtue-theoretic approach, this account of understanding starts by focusing on its value as a cognitive achievement and working from there. On this view, an agent with ampliative understanding will be able to acquire true beliefs in a way that manifests her cognitive abilities. While there are certainly other kinds of understanding that may be of epistemological import, ampliative understanding is able to accommodate our intuitions about the value of understanding and can capture most of the necessary features for understanding that we find in the literature. My hope is that, with the framework of ampliative understanding in place, we can have a debate that is both rigorous and productive.
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Models in chemical education : an investigation into their usesIngham, Angela M. January 1988 (has links)
This thesis is concerned with the use of models in chemical education, in particular the way chemistry students use models in understanding chemistry. The study begins with an outline of the reasons for my interest in the subject of models in chemistry. The report describes some of the problems encountered by undergraduate chemistry students in dealing with three dimensional structures, and surveys literature relating to visualization skills in chemistry. Preliminary broad areas for investigation are identified including the relevance of models to students, problems of representing 3D structures, and students' use of models to solve chemical problems. A pilot study to gather information in these areas and to develop a suitable research instrument for investigation is described. The pilot study proved useful in highlighting errors in understanding chemical concepts, assessing practical model use, and considering students' perceptions of the relevance of models. This is followed by a consideration of the role of models in understanding chemistry in relation to the nature of model, chemistry and understanding, and the links and interactions between them. It discusses issues such as the match between the currently perceived roles of models in chemical practice and in chemistry teaching and the desirability of bringing these into line. It surveys the literature concerning purpose of model use in chemistry and describes the features of chemical structure models used in the research. Criteria for selecting appropriate data collection and analysis methods in a research study are considered and 80me of the methods adopted in recent chemical education research described. The chapter concludes with a description and justification of the particular research methods used in the study. The report gives details of the interviews carried out with selected scientists to consider the notion of 'the good chemist'. It then describes the videorecorded workshop interviews with forty five chemistry students relating to their appreciation and use of models in chemistry, and the follow up int.erviews with eight of the participants. Data from these interviews are analysed in an attempt to answer the research questions posed initially, including individual chemists' purposes in using models, patterns in model appreciation, perceptions of the good chemist, fiexibility of model use as an indicator of competence as a chemist, and the potential of the workshop interview in higher education assessment. The research findings are discussed in relation to existing literature, and the study concludes with a discussion of the implications for chemistry curricula, chemical education and for future research.
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Using knowledge of purpose and knowledge of structure as a basis for evaluating the behaviour of mechanical systemsBradshaw, John Anthony January 1991 (has links)
No description available.
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Conflict between siblings in middle childhoodBeardsall, L. January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
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Eliciting expert conceptual structure using converging techniquesGammack, J. G. January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
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Understanding developments in computer technology : A pragmatic and synthetic interpretationConroy, P. W. January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
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Bridging and relevanceMatsui, Tomoko January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
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Young children's understanding of varieties of verbal referenceMitchell, P. L. January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
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Children's ideas about air pollutionMyers, George Foster January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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